Author

Topic: Rollback is BS (Read 7080 times)

member
Activity: 133
Merit: 10
June 21, 2011, 09:58:44 PM
#45
By rolling the price back to it's prior value and not letting the free market decide upon the new value after this attack, Mtgox is essentially saying that they themselves are the de facto controller of the value of bitcoin. I don't use bitcoin because I wanted some regulatory agency to say how much my money was worth, I wanted the market itself to decide that.

mtgox should be shut down anyway for this absolute gross failure to uphold private data.

are you blind? do you see the other exchanges trading with values in relation of what they were at mtgox during the time of the security breach? the free market is all up in those other exchanges deciding the value post-hack, RIGHT NAU!

mtgox is an exchange. there are other exchanges that trade for USD, shit theres one locally in cincinnatti at the hackerspace. do you think he was trading for .01$/BTC? hm, maybe its due to the fact those prices were not legitimately set by the free market?

if the free market decided BTC's were worth .01$, im sure the next day they would be worth .00$. (though id still buy a few bucks worth for S's and G's)

mtgox got hacked. if you're sad cause you didnt hit the "lottery", then you sir, are no better than the body(ies) that executed this attack.


my only issue with mtgox is their speed of recovery. id really like to get access to my <200USD i have in there. bitches should pay me intrest.
newbie
Activity: 42
Merit: 0
June 20, 2011, 12:48:08 PM
#44
And remember, the fact that there is at least a persons with 500k bitcoin isn't a problem for bitcoin... It's an healthy thing! :-)
legendary
Activity: 1692
Merit: 1018
June 20, 2011, 12:46:19 PM
#43
Not sure why people seem shocked/upset.

Greed.

+1.  The only people who are shocked and upset are those who snagged cents per BTC trades during the deliberate market attack.  They can feign innocence and ignorance all they want.  They were the indirect beneficieries of crime.
legendary
Activity: 1708
Merit: 1006
June 20, 2011, 12:37:00 PM
#42
Not sure why people seem shocked/upset.

Greed.
hero member
Activity: 914
Merit: 500
June 20, 2011, 12:31:36 PM
#41
Rolling back buy orders due to crash/volume flood is no different than what they do in real markets when there's a huge, sudden fluctuation. In fact, it happened a couple months ago here in the US:

http://www.reuters.com/article/2010/05/10/plunge-minis-idUSN1023971920100510

Standard practice is to halt all trading, unwind the trades executed during the specified period and cancel all open orders on the floor. Not sure why people seem shocked/upset.
iya
member
Activity: 81
Merit: 10
June 20, 2011, 08:06:33 AM
#40
Yeah, if they roll back trades, they also have to cancel all bids and asks.
newbie
Activity: 46
Merit: 0
June 20, 2011, 06:46:51 AM
#39
there were no legitimate trades i would argue sub 10$ that occurred, even after the initial sell off.  first off it was effectively a market order all the way down to fractions of a penny (ie all 1 order from the hacked account) and from there i think you could easily argue that 99% of the offers that existed for the next few minutes before the site was taken down were from people reselling the coins they just "bought" for 1 penny.  the rollback is the only solution, you cannot simply roll back the first sell off and none of the following sales because there will be countless people caught short in the market (which is currently unshortable).  it will be quite interesting to see what kind of vol comes in over the next few days and potentially weeks.

my only hope is that mtgox doesn't restore all of the bids / offers from pre-crash but instead lets us come in and fill them.  even though the bids i am working are about 13.50 and 10.25, i'd prefer to be able to revalue those myself rather than getting potentially filled the instant they bring the site back online.
legendary
Activity: 1284
Merit: 1001
June 20, 2011, 04:54:08 AM
#38
By rolling the price back to it's prior value and not letting the free market decide upon the new value after this attack, Mtgox is essentially saying that they themselves are the de facto controller of the value of bitcoin. I don't use bitcoin because I wanted some regulatory agency to say how much my money was worth, I wanted the market itself to decide that.
They're not rolling back the price, they're rolling back the trades. MtGox doesn't decide the price. If you think that is wrong you're just saying that you'll happily buy goods you know are stolen if the price is right, and it would just be proof of why your liberalist heaven would never work. How could it, when not even yourselves respect the right of property if you see the possibility to get rich?
full member
Activity: 196
Merit: 101
June 20, 2011, 12:54:04 AM
#37
Any libertarian in good standing would take him private army to Japan and start asking some questions.
member
Activity: 92
Merit: 10
June 19, 2011, 11:29:57 PM
#36
i smell lawsuits coming to mtgox.

Really? I would be extremely surprised how that would go. The legal status of Bitcoins is grey to say the least. Bitcoins are at best an unregulated speculative market, at worst they are an illegal currency. You cannot sue for the theft of something that is illegal; try suing a drug dealer because they gave you flour instead of cocaine Smiley

So, imagine a person had some bitcoins that were traded without their authorisation. What can they do? First we would have to look if there is a contract between the user and mt.gox, but there is no such thing, when signing up users were not given any terms and conditions through a click-wrap agreement, and the site has no ToC either. So any user would only have one recourse, and that is to hope that a court may recognise that Mt.Gox had some obligation to you, and that they were neglectful in their fulfilment of such obligation. This will be difficult to say the least without a contract.

So, even if you want to go ahead and sue, where would you do it? You could sue in your own jurisdiction, but foreign civil lawsuits are difficult to enforce, and we have established that BTCs may even be illegal in your jurisdiction. You could try suing in Japan, but for that you would need to hire a Japanese lawyer... not cheap. And then again, BTCs may be illegal in Japan too.

So, I don't really see any lawsuits happening any time soon.
member
Activity: 84
Merit: 10
June 19, 2011, 11:26:54 PM
#35
Damn! I thought I struck it big. Shit!
member
Activity: 70
Merit: 10
June 19, 2011, 09:35:20 PM
#34
i smell lawsuits coming to mtgox.

Good luck suing some guy in Tokyo who is only reachable via IRC.  MtGox doesn't even have a postal address to write to.

Why people here and on slashdot keep repeating that?

Mtgox.com was giving it's company address on their website.

K.K. Tibanne
24-30, Kugayama 5-Chome
Suginami-ku, Tokyo 168-0082

Sheeesh you guys need to learn your googles and html link clicking thingies.
legendary
Activity: 1120
Merit: 1003
June 19, 2011, 09:31:31 PM
#33
The real money to be made was in the price drops at all the other exchanges.   Wink
legendary
Activity: 1291
Merit: 1000
June 19, 2011, 09:18:59 PM
#32
Those people advocating against a rollback are taking a very strange position.  Imagine for a moment your bank account got hacked and the funds withdrawn.  Would you just shrug and say "Well, that's what the bank and temporary user of my account dictated.  I can't argue with the will of the market!"  Real exchanges (not Magic The Gathering trading sites like Mt Gox) roll back suspicious and erroneous trades on a regular basis.

There is absolutely nothing to be gained by allowing the ridiculous trades like $0.01 per BTC to remain.

No one is saying the illegal trades shouldn't be cancelled.  The argument is over voluntary trades not involving the stolen btc.
legendary
Activity: 1692
Merit: 1018
June 19, 2011, 09:00:54 PM
#31
i smell lawsuits coming to mtgox.

Good luck suing some guy in Tokyo who is only reachable via IRC.  MtGox doesn't even have a postal address to write to.
legendary
Activity: 1692
Merit: 1018
June 19, 2011, 08:59:34 PM
#30
Those people advocating against a rollback are taking a very strange position.  Imagine for a moment your bank account got hacked and the funds withdrawn.  Would you just shrug and say "Well, that's what the bank and temporary user of my account dictated.  I can't argue with the will of the market!"  Real exchanges (not Magic The Gathering trading sites like Mt Gox) roll back suspicious and erroneous trades on a regular basis.

There is absolutely nothing to be gained by allowing the ridiculous trades like $0.01 per BTC to remain.
member
Activity: 77
Merit: 10
June 19, 2011, 08:58:58 PM
#29
i smell lawsuits coming to mtgox.

If anybody wanna sue Mt Gox, I'll be there to throw shit and rotten banans at them greedy bastards outside of the court room -.-

Fucking disgusting people.
legendary
Activity: 1134
Merit: 1005
June 19, 2011, 08:42:00 PM
#28
i smell lawsuits coming to mtgox.
full member
Activity: 210
Merit: 100
firstbits: 121vnq
June 19, 2011, 07:50:12 PM
#27
Exchanges cancel orders all the time for various reasons.

If you don't like it, open another exchange. The greed on display here is disgusting.
full member
Activity: 189
Merit: 100
June 19, 2011, 07:10:07 PM
#26
Rollback is Awesome......................
member
Activity: 77
Merit: 10
June 19, 2011, 06:39:09 PM
#25
I think people who whine about the rollback is disgusting!

They give a shit about the guy who potentially lost 8 million dollars, because they were able to buy shitloads of BTC @ 0.05 USD rates, and now feel that they actually earned those coins.

In my eyes, it's more or less in line with stealing.
newbie
Activity: 20
Merit: 0
June 19, 2011, 06:03:24 PM
#23
I thought the same thing at first, but imagine if somebody hacked an online real estate trading site and sold a house that wasn't theirs and tried to run off with the money... Or somebody hacked an etrade account that had 100 billion Yuan...  Similar measures would be enacted. 

I didn't really take the sell off seriously, personally, everyone seemed to be aware that it was stolen BTC being sold off.  I was surprised when they announced the 'rollback' (unfortunate wording, I would say... I would have called it a 'reversal').  Before this I thought only Wal-Mart did rollbacks.  However, at this point, I'm pleased that a reversal is possible.
legendary
Activity: 1291
Merit: 1000
June 19, 2011, 05:21:49 PM
#22
Mea culpa

After eating some cheese and a spicy snack I've had a change of mind.

Since price conveys information about the market, and since price conveyed by the sale or purchase of stolen funds is false and is not to be reasonably expected by market participants, anybody who sold out voluntarily, or bought voluntarily, was not doing so under reasonably expected conditions.  If somebody sold 500,000 btc because they're a dork, that's one thing.  If 500,000 were sold off because they were stolen, that is something completely different.

While I find the attitude of "I made a mistake and sold because I panicked and now I want some governing body to fix my screw-up" appalling, and if I had sold sub-$10 I probably wouldn't be whining for a rollback, I would agree that in this scenario a rollback is the right thing to do.

sr. member
Activity: 257
Merit: 250
June 19, 2011, 05:20:13 PM
#21
yeah, how would MtGox enforce setting the price back?  Thats not what they claimed.  They're rolling back the bids and ask to approx when they were at that price.
hero member
Activity: 602
Merit: 500
June 19, 2011, 05:15:45 PM
#20
This has been discussed in the various other threads already devoted to this exact topic, but I think it's worth noting that MtGox dictates the price only on its own exchange. MtGox never said "Tradehill has to trade at xxx value". If you don't like it, no one is forcing you to use this exchange. That's what a free market really is if you're such a free-market enthusiast.
legendary
Activity: 2408
Merit: 1009
Legen -wait for it- dary
June 19, 2011, 05:14:21 PM
#19
@OP Cry
Quit crying you big baby! If it wasn't for the rollback, BTC would be crashing down around you right now!  Then what would you do with your stolen, worthless bitcoins?
hero member
Activity: 756
Merit: 500
June 19, 2011, 05:13:43 PM
#18
By rolling the price back to it's prior value and not letting the free market decide upon the new value after this attack, Mtgox is essentially saying that they themselves are the de facto controller of the value of bitcoin. I don't use bitcoin because I wanted some regulatory agency to say how much my money was worth, I wanted the market itself to decide that.

mtgox should be shut down anyway for this absolute gross failure to uphold private data.
qwk
donator
Activity: 3542
Merit: 3413
Shitcoin Minimalist
June 19, 2011, 04:51:46 PM
#17
They thought they had it made, and no matter what words they use, their argument is all simply one statement:  I wanted to be rich.  Nothing wrong with that, of course, but it's hard to respect such round-about weaselwording.  I haven't seen a single person there say "Damn!  I thought I struck it big.  Shit.", which is an attitude I would respect.

You know what they say - easy come, easy go.  That phrase was made for situations like this.

I for one wanted to buy at 0.01$, but could not (Mt Gox wouldn't take my order). For a few moments i really thought "what a great opportunity I missed". But right now, i'm really glad I didn't make it.

Not making the deal of your lifetime is one thing, but feeling like you did and then seeing it all slip away... ouch!
member
Activity: 135
Merit: 10
June 19, 2011, 04:46:55 PM
#16
Watch buyers step up next time the price drops sharply, and they want to get a bargain and thereby stabilizing the price. Or probably they won't because if they are wrong they lose money (no-rollback) and if they are right they make no money (possible rollback).
legendary
Activity: 1291
Merit: 1000
June 19, 2011, 04:46:33 PM
#15
People b1tching about no rollback are pathetic.
I think its the right call to RB, think about it for Christs sake, its the logical step...oh well, no reason to reason with "some" greedy or otherwise stupid + under-aged citizens.

Because of course it is not greedy to want to have a voluntary trade rolled back after you discover you may be able to sell for more. Roll Eyes
legendary
Activity: 1291
Merit: 1000
June 19, 2011, 04:43:36 PM
#14
The trades weren't legitimate so I think its entirely fair.

Other than the trades with the stolen coins, how were the other trades not 'legitimate'?  Did somebody make a trade non-voluntarily?  

I stand to lose quite a bundle from the rollback, but I won't be complaining to Mt.Gox.  They're in a tough business and they're doing a lot to help bitcoin along and days like today have got to be rough.  Still, if somebody panic sells at 8 bucks because they saw somebody else panic sell at 9 bucks, I fail to see how that is an illegitimate trade.

All of those trades were initiated because the price was hacked to drop.  Had the hack not happened, none of those trades would have been made.  The majority of the coins sold were those that were stolen.  Do you really think it is OK to profit off one rich bastard's misfortune?

Maybe you didn't read my entire post.  I indicated that trades with stolen coins were not legitimate.
sr. member
Activity: 254
Merit: 250
https://www.soar.earth/
June 19, 2011, 04:40:38 PM
#13
People b1tching about no rollback are pathetic.
I think its the right call to RB, think about it for Christs sake, its the logical step...oh well, no reason to reason with "some" greedy or otherwise stupid + under-aged citizens.
full member
Activity: 140
Merit: 100
June 19, 2011, 04:40:21 PM
#12
The trades weren't legitimate so I think its entirely fair.

Other than the trades with the stolen coins, how were the other trades not 'legitimate'?  Did somebody make a trade non-voluntarily?  

I stand to lose quite a bundle from the rollback, but I won't be complaining to Mt.Gox.  They're in a tough business and they're doing a lot to help bitcoin along and days like today have got to be rough.  Still, if somebody panic sells at 8 bucks because they saw somebody else panic sell at 9 bucks, I fail to see how that is an illegitimate trade.

All of those trades were initiated because the price was hacked to drop.  Had the hack not happened, none of those trades would have been made.  The majority of the coins sold were those that were stolen.  Do you really think it is OK to profit off one rich bastard's misfortune?
legendary
Activity: 1291
Merit: 1000
June 19, 2011, 04:38:08 PM
#11

Anyone who saw the price drop knew something went wrong , NO ONE would go buy if they really believed that bitcoins just became worth a big fat NUL.

I guess you weren't trading tech stocks in 1999-2000.
member
Activity: 84
Merit: 10
June 19, 2011, 04:37:51 PM
#10
Faceless Businessman is my favorite pony of the show.  He is overflowing with frustrated envy.
legendary
Activity: 1291
Merit: 1000
June 19, 2011, 04:36:07 PM
#9
The trades weren't legitimate so I think its entirely fair.

Other than the trades with the stolen coins, how were the other trades not 'legitimate'?  Did somebody make a trade non-voluntarily?  

I stand to lose quite a bundle from the rollback, but I won't be complaining to Mt.Gox.  They're in a tough business and they're doing a lot to help bitcoin along and days like today have got to be rough.  Still, if somebody panic sells at 8 bucks because they saw somebody else panic sell at 9 bucks, I fail to see how that is an illegitimate trade.
hero member
Activity: 504
Merit: 502
June 19, 2011, 04:33:37 PM
#8
Some cruel part of me is taking great amusement in the frothy-mouthed furor that has filled the Mt. Gox frontpage.  Eloquent, passionate arguments about how things should have been, must be, how they're done in the real world, and how Mt. Gox will lose all their business over this, all by a tiny group of people who were (un?)fortunate enough to trade for huge numbers of bitcoins at 0.01. 

They thought they had it made, and no matter what words they use, their argument is all simply one statement:  I wanted to be rich.  Nothing wrong with that, of course, but it's hard to respect such round-about weaselwording.  I haven't seen a single person there say "Damn!  I thought I struck it big.  Shit.", which is an attitude I would respect.

You know what they say - easy come, easy go.  That phrase was made for situations like this.

Anyone who saw the price drop knew something went wrong , NO ONE would go buy if they really believed that bitcoins just became worth a big fat NUL.

They tried their luck and hoped mtgox would overlook it and let it go on like last weekend when prices dropped from 32 to 10, and I am sure something went very wrong then aswell. It wasnt merely a market price decline.
member
Activity: 84
Merit: 10
June 19, 2011, 04:30:18 PM
#7
Some cruel part of me is taking great amusement in the frothy-mouthed furor that has filled the Mt. Gox frontpage.  Eloquent, passionate arguments about how things should have been, must be, how they're done in the real world, and how Mt. Gox will lose all their business over this, all by a tiny group of people who were (un?)fortunate enough to trade for huge numbers of bitcoins at 0.01. 

They thought they had it made, and no matter what words they use, their argument is all simply one statement:  I wanted to be rich.  Nothing wrong with that, of course, but it's hard to respect such round-about weaselwording.  I haven't seen a single person there say "Damn!  I thought I struck it big.  Shit.", which is an attitude I would respect.

You know what they say - easy come, easy go.  That phrase was made for situations like this.
newbie
Activity: 22
Merit: 0
June 19, 2011, 04:27:40 PM
#6
I really wouldnt want to profit off others misfortue, just be bad karma. Its all just growing pains that need to be worked out.
member
Activity: 84
Merit: 10
June 19, 2011, 04:24:51 PM
#5
This thread is BS.
legendary
Activity: 1022
Merit: 1001
June 19, 2011, 04:21:47 PM
#4
The trades weren't legitimate so I think its entirely fair.
qwk
donator
Activity: 3542
Merit: 3413
Shitcoin Minimalist
June 19, 2011, 04:19:52 PM
#3
Mt. Gox can do as they want but I don't think it is fair in regards to the traders who had orders in at $0.01  Embarrassed

So, you think it is fair that those traders would gain enormous profit from a hack?
newbie
Activity: 14
Merit: 0
June 19, 2011, 04:16:28 PM
#2
I'm sure several people will be moving over to TradeHill.
member
Activity: 135
Merit: 10
June 19, 2011, 04:11:31 PM
#1
Mt. Gox can do as they want but I don't think it is fair in regards to the traders who had orders in at $0.01  Embarrassed
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